HZ: I wanted to call the
album Guilty Pleasures, because I think people admit to their Paul
Simon albums and that stuff, but they don’t admit to owning soundtrack
albums. Actually, Chris Roberts at Decca, who is a very wise
man, said that people will think it was a porno album! Ridley
Scott had said to someone that ol’ Hans gives “wings to a film” and
that’s where the title came from – It’s a “Scott-ism.”

CC: You
performed a few other pieces at the Festival that night: Roll
Tide (Crimson Tide), The Wheat, and The Gladiator Waltz (Gladiator).
How did you decide which pieces would make The Wings of a Film?

HZ:
So you’re saying
I put the wrong songs on the album? (laughs)

CC: Not
necessarily.

HZ: Some
things work when you perform them live…because who cares about a
couple of wrong notes. Now, on the other hand, a couple of wrong
notes or even a hundred of them on a CD is forever! So, some
pieces just didn’t sound very good. You have to remember that
when I write a score, very rarely do I write for normal symphony
orchestras.

CC: So is
that solely how you decided what you wanted to go on the album?

HZ: No.
In my mind it was still this “Guilty Pleasures” album. I didn’t
want the album to have too much of the big, pompous stuff. I
wanted to have the fun stuff. I wanted that whole concert, that
whole album, to be about the people I’ve been working with over the
years… and not about the directors! (laughs) The only way you
can do this sort of thing, without it being completely pretentious, is
to just make it fun.

CC: Since
you don’t do live performances very often, did this experience change
your feelings about live performances and maybe doing more of them?

HZ: It’s
gone from “I will never do this again!” to “Well, I’ll have to think
about it.” People like Heitor Pereira and “that band” that keep
saying, “Why don’t we do something else? We’ve practiced now!”
So to answer your question, I don’t know what we would do, but we
might. We are open to offers!

CC: I have
come across some “buzz” about something entitled “Director’s Cuts.”

HZ: Oh!
You’ve found that?

CC: Sure
did. What was the inspiration for this
new venture?

HZ: Well,
I’ll tell you exactly where it comes from. It comes from those
poor, orphaned pieces that I used to throw away. If you listened
to
More Music from Gladiator, well, there are quite a few pieces
there that would never have seen the light of day. They are not
in the movie but they are really a part of the process of how to get
"there." You know what I mean? They would have been easy
contenders for Director’s Cuts had I not done More Music from
Gladiator. So often you write something and you think it’s
pretty good, but it just isn’t right for the movie you’re working on.

I remember on
Rain Man, I was writing away and I had this one tune.
It was a really good tune and I knew, at the time, it wouldn’t fit
into the film. I was on to something, but I just had to carry on
writing. I later played it for Barry (Levinson) and he said “It
just isn’t going to work.” That piece somehow ended up on the
batch with all the other stuff I was doing. Later, I remember
walking into a meeting where everyone is screaming at everyone else
because that piece ended up in the trailer. The trailer-guy was
saying, “Well, it’s the only ‘happy piece’ he’s written!”

CC: So
what is the current status of Director's Cuts?

HZ: God
knows. I have been pretty busy!

CC: Would
you say that Director’s Cuts is, then, targeting smaller film
productions that may not have the big budgets to hire a Hans Zimmer,
John Powell, or a Harry Gregson-Williams?

HZ: Yes,
well, something like that. Whatever it is or turns out to be,
let’s just wait and see. It’s an experiment and there’s nothing
wrong with that. It’s not like these orphaned pieces are “bad”
pieces of music. It’s just the wrong thing at the time.

CC: I
haven’t really heard much or read much from you since Oscar night, so
I’m curious to ask: Did you feel, in your gut, that you were going to
win it?

HZ: No. I
never do. I never do that. It would have been nice... but
on the other hand, it wasn’t like I was losing to somebody I didn’t
respect or someone's music I hated.

CC: Were
you surprised that Tan Dun did win?

HZ: No.
Not really. As soon as that movie came out, I said to my wife,
“He’s gonna win the best score.” She said, “You’re crazy!” and
as it turns out, I am NOT crazy! I had a gut feeling about it.

CC: What
about timing? Gladiator released back in May of 2000
while Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon really began its ground
swell at the close of 2000.

HZ: I
really don’t know. I don’t how it works or why it works.
There has only really been one time that I was upset about losing and
that was for Thin Red Line.

CC: Now,
why is that? What was it about Thin Red Line?

HZ: I knew
it was really good. Usually I say, “Eh. It’s ok.”
Even with Gladiator, I said, “Eh, It’s ok.” But Thin
Red Line was really original and it really supported that movie.
I really believe it is good work and I did spent two years working on
it.

CC: It
seemed that more buzz was created regarding one piece from Thin Red
Line, “Journey to the Line” which was included in the first
Pearl Harbor trailer from a year or so ago, than Thin Red Line,
itself, ever created.

HZ: Oh
yes! Absolutely! I mean thank you very much for the
Pearl Harbor trailer, because it did more for Thin Red Line
than the Fox press department could ever do.

CC: Were
you pressured to come up with something similar for Pearl Harbor,
since Journey to the Line had become so meshed with the images
of the trailer?

HZ: The
good thing is that I didn’t even realize it was used for the trailer.
I didn’t even see the trailer until way down the road. Jerry
(Bruckheimer) had shown me some animatics for Pearl Harbor some
two years ago and it had Thin Red Line on it. So I
thought, “Oh, that’s just the piece they are using to play around
with.” Still, that piece was a huge inspiration to Michael
(Bay). I always knew that I was going to write

in a very different style

for Pearl Harbor . I mean, I had already done Thin Red
Line. Why would I want to do it again?

CC: What
about your upcoming projects: Riding in Cars with Boys and
Black Hawk Down?

HZ: Don’t
know what I’m doing yet…just working. As far as Black Hawk
Down, I'm working with Ridley (Scott) again, but I don’t
even know where we are going to “park it" yet.

CC: So at
this point, they are just seeds in your mind?

HZ: Oh
sure. Absolutely.

CC: Well,
to rap things up, let me ask you this. What legacy do you wish
to leave on the music world? When people hear the name Hans
Zimmer, what do you want them to think of first?

HZ: {long
pause} “Once upon a time, he wrote a piece of music that wasn’t so
bad.” That would be good enough for me!

CC: I
appreciate your time today and all the best with your upcoming
projects!